swayanrekiya.com

August 25, 2025

What swayanrekiya.com is and what it’s trying to do

Swayanrekiya.com presents itself as a Sri Lanka–focused “earn from home” self-employment hub (“ස්වයං රැකියා”) aimed at people who want to start small, home-based work opportunities. The homepage is largely in Sinhala, with language options shown for English and Tamil, and it pushes a single main action: “Apply Now.”

The site’s core pitch is straightforward: you can do self-employment work from home and, according to the site, earn roughly LKR 3,000 to LKR 10,000 per day. That’s a strong claim, and it’s positioned as a realistic range rather than a rare best-case outcome.

What the site claims you get when you join

The homepage frames the service as a “trusted” group/community and lists reasons you “should choose” them. The big points are:

  • No deposit / no upfront bank payments. The site explicitly says it does not ask people to deposit money into bank accounts to get work, and it contrasts itself with others who ask for money for jobs.
  • Participation via a mobile subscription model. It says you can join through a mobile subscription and leave the service when you want. This is notable because it’s not the typical “pay registration fee” pattern, but it still suggests some form of ongoing paid access.
  • Materials delivered to your home. The site claims that required raw materials (depending on the type of work) are delivered to your house anywhere in Sri Lanka, with no transport costs paid by you.
  • Open to anyone. It says people can join regardless of age, and the messaging is aimed at students, people at home, and those who don’t want a standard 8–5 job.

It also includes testimonial-style quotes from individuals describing how they applied (including via TikTok), joined opportunities, and now earn income from home.

How applying actually works (based on what’s visible)

Even though the site looks like a standalone web property, the application flow appears to route you off-site.

  • The “Apply Now” button links to a hosted page on myappmaker.io, which is a platform that hosts Progressive Web Apps built using Appmaker.lk’s no-code tools.
  • The “Contact Us” button goes to a Google Forms link (the web tool flagged it as unsafe to open in this environment, but the destination is clearly a Google Form URL).
  • The site lists a direct contact email: Contact@swayanrekiya.com.

When the “Apply Now” destination was opened here, it loaded an Appmaker-branded page that required JavaScript and showed an “Oops / no internet connection” message, which is a common behavior for web apps that don’t render well in restricted or script-limited viewers.

Also worth mentioning: when attempting to open the English and Tamil versions shown in the header, the fetch failed with server errors (502), at least at the time of checking. That doesn’t prove anything on its own, but it does mean the non-Sinhala versions may be unstable or misconfigured right now.

What’s missing from the public-facing page

If you treat swayanrekiya.com like a business offering work opportunities, there are a few standard details you’d normally expect to see clearly:

  • a company name and registration details (or at least an identifiable legal entity)
  • a physical address
  • clear terms: how you get paid, timelines, minimum output, who bears risk for damaged materials, return policies, etc.
  • privacy policy and how personal data is handled (especially since the flow involves sign-up and likely identity/contact details)

On the homepage snapshot, the main identifiable info is the email address plus a footer that says “Swayan rekiya © 2024. All rights reserved.”

None of that automatically makes it illegitimate. Plenty of small projects are minimal. But if you’re evaluating whether to trust it, these omissions matter because they raise the cost of verifying who you’re dealing with.

How to evaluate swayanrekiya.com safely before sharing details or committing

If you’re considering signing up, treat it like any “work from home” offer where the upside is emphasized.

  1. Ask for the exact work types before you join anything paid. The homepage talks about different kinds of at-home business/work, but it doesn’t list a clear catalog of the specific opportunities on the main page. If they claim “materials delivered,” you want specifics: what items, what quantities, what output standards, and what happens if materials are damaged in transit.

  2. Get payment mechanics in writing. The site states an income range (LKR 3,000–10,000 per day). Ask what that assumes: hours per day, output volume, rejection rates, and how quickly payouts happen.

  3. Clarify the “mobile subscription” part. They position it as a safer alternative to bank deposits, but a subscription can still be a cost. Ask: subscription price, billing frequency, cancellation steps, and whether you can access work opportunities without paying.

  4. Use basic website and identity verification. Independently check the domain age, ownership signals, and whether the listed email domain is used consistently across official channels. Reputation-check tools exist (for any domain), but don’t treat a single “trust score” as the truth. Use it as one data point alongside real documentation and direct answers.

  5. Be careful with personal information. If the sign-up process asks for NIC numbers, photos of IDs, bank details, or anything sensitive early, pause and ask why it’s required at that stage. With flows that route to third-party platforms (Appmaker hosting, Google Forms), you should be extra clear about where your data is going and who controls it.

The broader context: “Swayan Rakiya” is also used elsewhere

One point of confusion is naming. “Swayan Rakiya” (self-employment) is a general term and appears widely in Sri Lankan content and apps, including Appmaker-hosted “Swayan Rakiya” pages that describe self-employment guidance and lists of opportunities. So you should assume there are multiple unrelated projects using similar names. Don’t rely on the name alone—verify the exact domain, the exact contact channels, and the exact organization behind it.

Key takeaways

  • swayanrekiya.com markets home-based self-employment opportunities in Sri Lanka and claims daily income in the LKR 3,000–10,000 range.
  • The main “Apply Now” action routes to a myappmaker.io hosted web app, and contact appears to route through a Google Form and a domain email address.
  • The homepage emphasizes “no bank deposit,” but it also mentions joining via a mobile subscription, which still implies an ongoing cost to understand clearly.
  • Public details about the operator (legal entity, address, formal terms) are limited on the visible homepage, so verification should be done before sharing sensitive info.

FAQ

Is swayanrekiya.com a government program?

Nothing on the visible homepage indicates it is a government program. It reads like a private service/community, with a domain email contact and an application flow routed through third-party platforms.

Do you have to pay money to join?

The site says it does not require bank deposits to get work, but it also mentions joining through a mobile subscription. The practical answer is: you should assume there may be a cost until they provide the exact subscription price and terms in writing.

What kinds of work are offered?

The homepage doesn’t show a clear, itemized list of specific jobs on the main page. It speaks generally about home-based opportunities and materials delivered. You’ll want the exact list, requirements, and pay structure before committing.

Why does “Apply Now” go to myappmaker.io?

MyAppmaker.io hosts Progressive Web Apps built using Appmaker.lk’s no-code builder. Some services use it to publish lightweight “app-like” experiences without building native apps. That setup can be normal, but it also means your sign-up experience and data handling may occur outside the main domain, so it’s worth checking who owns and administers the app.

What’s a safe way to proceed if I’m interested?

Start by asking for: the exact job types, subscription cost and cancellation steps, written payout terms, and who the legal operator is (company name and registration). Avoid sending sensitive documents until those basics are clear and consistent across official channels.